Responding to bushfires in our parks

We coordinate different strategies and resources to respond to, control and suppress bushfire in national parks. These include our fire fighters on the ground, aerial teams and backburning operations.

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The New South Wales National Parks and Wildlife Service, part of the Office of Environment and Heritage, coordinates bushfire response in our national parks. This includes issuing notifications of incidents and coordinating resources, such as sending firefighters to bushfires in NSW as well as interstate and overseas.

Our staff are highly trained to respond to bushfires. To enable staff to respond effectively to bushfire incidents they attend:

fire, incident and aviation training courses

annual training, skills and fitness recertification programs.

During the fire season, several of our staff work in key roles at the NSW Rural Fire Service State Operations Centre to help coordinate bushfire incident response

Fire suppression methods

Fire suppression involves all actions undertaken to contain and control fire, from the time a fire is detected until it is extinguished and declared ‘out’.

Strategies used to suppress bushfires include:

direct and indirect attack

backburning

use of earthmoving equipment

use of fire suppression chemicals.

More than one strategy may be used to respond to and control a bushfire. The choice of strategy depends on:

Ground crews can often directly contain and suppress a fire front using water and hand tools. This depends on the size and intensity of the fire and the terrain it is in., Our firefighters are expert at using dry firefighting: methods of fire suppression that do not rely on water being available.

Our highly trained remote area fire teams (RAFTs) use helicopters to reach otherwise inaccessible areas to quickly extinguish fires. NPWS is a world leader in developing this method of treating fires.

As part of the Enhanced Bushfire Management Program, dedicated remote aerial response teams (RARTs) are placed on standby in high-risk locations during the fire season so they can reach fires quickly.

provide a platform for airborne radio repeaters (by using a radio receiver and transmitter to retransmit two-way radio signals over long distances)

provide a command or observational platform

Our helicopters are used to:

transport and winch fire crews onto the fireground (the area where fire-fighting operation are taking place)

provide operational support for crews on the fireground

identify hotspots using infra-red sensors

undertake reconnaissance

provide air-attack supervision, command or observational platforms

undertake aerial ignition and water bombing.

Large air tankers have been used in NSW since the 2015­–2016 fire season. NPWS and NSW Rural Fire Service aviation specialists coordinate a lead plane to accompany the tankers. This plane is used to assess the fireground and determine the best flight path for the tankers and then lead them across the fireground to show them where to drop their load.

Our aviation unit also contributes to wildlife and pest management, as well as transport of materials and training.

Backburning is a tactic used to control and contain bushfires. It involves igniting another fire to consume fuel in the path of the main fire. Backburning is an effective fire suppression tactic that can be cost effective. It is also environmentally sustainable as the bush can recover from this practice.

A backburn is usually lit from a secure control line and allowed to burn towards the main fire. A control line is a barrier that blocks the spread of a fire. It can be an existing feature of the landscape such as a river, lake or road or a barrier created by firefighters. A manmade control line is a strip of ground that has been dug up, burned out or otherwise cleared of fuel ahead of a fire's advance.

A backburn is only conducted only when both fuel and weather conditions are suitable for the containment of the burn. This may be at night when it is cooler and more humid, after a wind shift or lull, or after a cool change.

Earthmoving equipment, such as bulldozers, tractors and graders, can be an effective way of rapidly constructing fire control lines.

Use of this equipment can cause serious damage to the environment including soil erosion, damage to natural and cultural heritage and the translocation of weeds and pathogens. Conditions apply to the use of earthmoving equipment within national parks to maintain conservation values and meet environmental legislative requirements. Immediately after a fire, NPWS carries out remediation work to ensure that no permanent harm is done.

The two types of bushfire suppression chemicals used to suppress fires are retardants and foams. Retardants decrease the flammability and availability of fuels. Foams increase the effectiveness of water as an extinguishing agent. Foams are meant for immediate use on active flames. Salt wateris also classed as a fire suppression chemical because of the potential negative environmental impact it can cause if used in fire suppression.

Retardants (long-term suppression)
Retardant compounds are composed of ammonium phosphate or ammonium sulphate. They are usually used for parallel and indirect attack on fires and are applied by agricultural fixed wing aircraft and/or large air tankers. They limit the spread of low intensity sections of a fire.

Foams (short-term suppression)
Foaming agents contain surfactants similar to those found in household detergents. Foam surfactants aid direct attack operations by expanding water droplets, coating fuels to starve a fire of oxygen, increasing insulation, remaining on fuel surface longer and penetrating deeper into the fuel layer.

Salt water is occasionally used for water bombing operations in reserves along the coast and estuaries. The negative impact of salt water on the environment increases the further the location is from the coast. This is because the further plant and animal communities are from the coast the less tolerant they are of salt.

The environmental impacts of fire suppression chemicals are minimal and we try to minimise the use of chemicals near water courses.

All fire management operations need to be evaluated to avoid or minimise adverse impacts on the environment on NPWS-managed lands. Threatened species, populations and communities, and water catchments are given special consideration.

Fire may have a positive impact on native vegetation. Where a vegetation community has not burnt for a considerable time and plants are aging and deteriorating, our Incident Management Team may decide to allow this area to burn up to defined control lines, rather than contain the fire to a smaller area. This is only allowed where the risk to life and property is minimal.

We work to protect a broad range of cultural heritage items including structures, works such as roads, dams, cultural heritage and landscapes, modified landscapes and archaeological sites.

Aboriginal heritage in our parks is protected and includes Aboriginal sites and artefacts, landscapes with physical evidence of Aboriginal cultural practices, natural landforms, sites of spiritual or ceremonial significance, native plants used in bush foods and medicines, and animals including totem species.

Cultural sites of significance are identified in fire management strategies which are used to guide fire suppression operations. During fires in reserves of high cultural significance, our cultural heritage conservation officers are consulted to ensure the protection of these assets from fire suppression operations. Post-fire rehabilitation is also undertaken where required.

Page last updated
4 April 2018

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